EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas accused Russia on 26 March of providing intelligence to Iran 'to kill Americans' and supplying drones to bolster Iranian capabilities against neighbouring countries and US military bases. 1 Western intelligence indicates phased drone deliveries are completing by the end of March. Kallas stated directly: 'Russia is helping Iran with intelligence to target Americans, to kill Americans, and Russia is also supporting Iran now with the drones.'
The accusation is public and specific. The American silence is conspicuous. Kallas is the EU's most senior foreign affairs official and is speaking in her institutional capacity. The claim that Russia is providing targeting intelligence against US forces is qualitatively different from Russian arms sales or diplomatic support: it constitutes active operational participation in attacks on American military personnel.
Washington has not responded. If Russia is actively providing targeting intelligence against US forces in the Middle East, that approaches, though does not trigger textually, the threshold for NATO Article 5 considerations. The treaty requires an 'armed attack' against a member state; intelligence-sharing that enables attacks on US forces in non-NATO territory does not meet the textual threshold. But it approaches the spirit of collective defence. The alliance deliberately avoids defining grey-zone provocations because any definition would invite adversaries to operate just below it. No senior US or NATO official has publicly addressed what the response to Russian operational support for attacks on American forces should be. The question is not being asked because nobody wants to hear the answer while the primary military focus remains Iran.
